1. Peak: the time when something is at its highest or greatest level. 2. Steady (constante): staying at the same level, speed, value, etc
-British financial terms which are not used in the USA.The American terms are on the right and the British terms are on the left:
3. Creditors (acreedores) or accounts payable (cuentas por pagar) Creditor: a person or company that is owed money by another person or company. 4. Owe (deber): if you owe someone money, you have to give them a particular amount of money because you have bought something from them or have borrowed money from them. Money that you owe is called a debt. 5. Debtors (deudores) or accounts receivable (cuentas por cobrar)
Debtor: a person who owes a creditor; someone who has the obligation of paying a debt.
-to categorise marketing aspects:
6. Franchising (franquicias): ▸ noun: a business established or operated under an authorization to sell or distribute a company's goods or services in a particular area. 7. Inventory (inventario): making an itemized list of merchandise or supplies on hand ("The inventory took two days") 8. Market coverage (covertura de mercado): Number of active retail and/or wholesale outlets that sell a specific firm's brands in a given market.
-to identify some tools:
9. Saw (sierra): a tool used for cutting wood or metal, consisting of a handle and a metal blade with several sharp teeth along one edge. 10. Drill (taladro): a tool with a sharp point and cutting edges for making holes in hard materials (usually rotating rapidly or by repeated blows)
I worked with "Forming Gerunds"
New words for me:
"hop" (which means "to jump on one leg"- hopping
judging (from judge): the cognitive process of reaching a decision or drawing conclusions. filtering (from filter): remove by passing through a filter
I learned:
- to describe trends
1. Peak: the time when something is at its highest or greatest level.
2. Steady (constante): staying at the same level, speed, value, etc
- British financial terms which are not used in the USA.The American terms are on the right and the British terms are on the left:
3. Creditors (acreedores) or accounts payable (cuentas por pagar)
Creditor: a person or company that is owed money by another person or company.
4. Owe (deber): if you owe someone money, you have to give them a particular amount of money because you have bought something from them or have borrowed money from them. Money that you owe is called a debt.
5. Debtors (deudores) or accounts receivable (cuentas por cobrar)
Debtor: a person who owes a creditor; someone who has the obligation of paying a debt.
-to categorise marketing aspects:
6. Franchising (franquicias): ▸ noun: a business established or operated under an authorization to sell or distribute a company's goods or services in a particular area.
7. Inventory (inventario): making an itemized list of merchandise or supplies on hand ("The inventory took two days")
8. Market coverage (covertura de mercado): Number of active retail and/or wholesale outlets that sell a specific firm's brands in a given market.
-to identify some tools:
9. Saw (sierra): a tool used for cutting wood or metal, consisting of a handle and a metal blade with several sharp teeth along one edge.
10. Drill (taladro): a tool with a sharp point and cutting edges for making holes in hard materials (usually rotating rapidly or by repeated blows)
I worked with "Forming Gerunds"
New words for me:
"hop" (which means "to jump on one leg"- hopping
judging (from judge): the cognitive process of reaching a decision or drawing conclusions.filtering (from filter): remove by passing through a filter